Amy Wright (curler)

Amy Wright (née Hatten, born January 28, 1964) is an American curler from Duluth, Minnesota.[1]

Amy Wright
Born
Amy Hatten

(1964-01-28) January 28, 1964
Career
World Championship
appearances
3 (1994, 1992, 2000)

Curling career

Wright made her United States Nationals debut in 1984 and competed on the winning team. Since 1984 she has competed in sixteen more US Nationals, with her last appearance in 2010. In addition to her team's victory in 1984, Wright has also been victorious in 1992 and 2000. She has been a runner-up once and won the Bronze medal at the 2009 Nationals, which doubled as the Olympic Trials for the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.

As the United States champion Wright has made three appearances at the Curling World Championships. Her team took ninth at her first worlds in 1984. Eight years later in 1992 she returned to the worlds, winning the silver medal and receiving the Frances Brodie Sportsmanship Award.[2] At the 2000 Glasgow World Championships her team placed sixth with a 4–5 record.

After a seventh-place finish at the 2006 US Nationals Wright announced she would take a break from competitive curling. However, as the Vancouver Olympics neared, she joined Courtney George, Jordan Moulton, and Patti Luke to make an attempt to represent the United States. At the 2010 United States Olympic Curling Trials Wright's team finished in third.

Personal life

Wright is married and has two children. She earned a bachelor's degree in business and economics.[3]

Teammates

2010 United States Olympic Curling Trials

2010 United States Women's Curling Championship

Courtney George, Third

Jordan Moulton, Second

Patti Luke, Lead

Amanda McLean, Alternate

  • Note: Amanda McLean served as the Alternate only for the 2010 Nationals
gollark: How odd. You'd expect them to have direct mass→energy conversion or something ridiculous like that.
gollark: If you convert, I don't know, a few hundred tons of mass to energy, you could *probably* blow up the earth?
gollark: Ah yes, so now you need to have insanely huge amounts of energy, very helpful.
gollark: You do need to have available matter to convert on the other end, and the whole concept is very hard to implement.
gollark: If you disæssemble something into its constituent particles or something, record every detail of their state (which might be impossible too?) and transmit it to another thing which reassembles it, that's lightspeed teleportation, ish.

References

  1. http://www.usacurl.org/curlingrocks//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=213&Itemid=39
  2. "Frances Brodie Award". World Curling Federation. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  3. "Amy Wright". USA Curling. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
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